Baxter - BV649 B3 1670

34$ All menhave Errours, we are every man certain ingeneral that we have errours,thoughno man know in lfarticular which be his own errours! ( For it is a contradi&ion to fay that while I err in judgement I knowmy er- mour) fo that other men know our errours when we know them not our (elves , as we know theirs which are unknown to them. For as all have their common defeEls, fomoi+ men have their pe- ccal i t !efeas and errours, and others excel thofe perfons in fóme particulars, who excel then in almofl all the refl. Therefore ifno errour were to be tolerated, no man were to be tolerated And the wifeft in the world moil be numbered with the intolerableas well as the refl. And eve- ryone that punifh.eth others, mutt be confci- ous of the fame intolerable evil in himfsif and that nothing but power exempteth him from the fame fufferíng_, and therefore none but the King Ihould elcape. Inmany things we fend ail : There.: fore be not many Matters (too imperiou4 or too cen- foriotu towards diffehters and the infirm) left ye re- ceive the greater condemnation. Jam. 3. I, 2. GODwho is One, hath made the creatures MANY and divers : And the further they go fromHim, the more they run into?in/tip/icily and diverfity : It is admirable irï Nature to fee that a- mong the mílliòns of perfons in the world, there are no two that differ not fufficiently to bedifcer -- nable from each other: And among the bruits and inanimates it ie fo too : Among horfes and oxen and fheep and all creatures, yea thoàgh non ov.pna ovm/imilius be a proverb, yet there are nò two that do not differ : No nor amóng the mil= lions of ffones which lye fcattered over the .%r- face

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